Repairing PVC double sanitary tee?

Hi folks..I did a stupid thing last night. And I know the right answer. Im just curious if I can avoid the hell it will be

While trying to remove the toilet flange so I could put down another layer of subfloor, I reefed on it too hard and cracked the (suspiciously off color) downstream double sanitary tee with side inlet. It's not broken off, so theoretically I'm able to peel it back, prime & glue the crack, and not have to tear the whole thing apart.

Wondering if this is a common repair, absolute insanity, etc. I'll attach a pic. It's the right side hub, cracked where it meets the side inlet hub. Hard to see the crack in the pic but it's a good 270 degrees around. It's the line that doesn't make the 90 degree turn to the left, that's a casting line.

thanks,
jim

Attached Files:

It would have been difficult or impossible to crack the tee there. If anything was going to snap, it should have been the hub where the toilet pipe is connected. Therefore, the assumption would be that it was either a defect or already partially cracked and you just made it worse. There is almost no repair that I would trust at that location.

Thanks for the responses. The plumber came out, went to get parts, called me from the road said he got a no heat emergency and would be a few hours, which runs into Thanksgiving prep work I need to do.

Meanwhile, I'd been looking at my glue repair I did for grins this morning and I gotta say it's holding up well. I was able to follow the crack around and prime it, and get glue in just about all of it. Flushed the toilet on the good arm, whose water would directly hit the crack, and it's dry. I can apply reasonable force to the pipe and it hasn't moved.

Can I expect this joint to weaken with time or are glued joints pretty long lasting? There's about an inch of insulation between the tee and the rim joist, plus I can replace that with spray foam for better insulative performance (and added support).